This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respect for the families in Australia that held onto their land and shared their stories with us. It was especially moving when BrianMonk speaks directly to the audience near the end of the video, very powerful indeed - we would be very wise to listen and act accordingly.
This film should be distributed and shown as widely as possible so we can learn and act. Full credit to Ian R Crane and his colleagues for turning around this moving, informative, high quality film in less than four months since his return from Australia.Thank you Ian and the families from Australia for the absolutely invaluable insight this film gives.
We need to take heed of the “Voices from the Gasfields” so these honourable families have not stayed loyal to their lands in vain.
Please support by donating via www.FrackingNightmare.com
FRACKING NIGHTMARE Playlist : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_m831VVDWL35u2ouMclF5ZGe7gdS7T6l
'Voices from the Gasfields' DVD orders : htttp://www.ianRcrane.com

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

published:12 May 2017

views:58683

- Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips -
Oil and gas are generated from a source rock, organic matter buried in the depths of the earth. Once formed, they climb back towards the surface. On their way, cap rocks can impede their progress and they accumulate in reservoir rocks. Here they constitute hydrocarbon fields, which can be identified by interpreting seismic data (a sort of echography).
The data is obtained with the help of a seismic ship. To confirm the interpretations of seismic data, two types of drilling gear exist. Each is adapted to a range of depth of water (down to more than 2500 meters). The platform seen here is a semi-submersible, which floats and retains its stabilised position by means of anchors fixed on the seabed.
Platforms at sea are used not only for drilling but also for the production of hydrocarbons. This production consists of the separation of oil, gas and water, before the oil and gas is taken by pipeline towards a mainland terminal. Where it is impossible or too expensive to link the field to the coast by a pipeline, an FPSO ship is used (Floating Production Storage and Offloading barge). Onboard, the hydrocarbons and the water are separated. The oil is stored prior to being loaded on tankers and the gas is re-injected into the reservoir rocks. Gas from a field is taken to land through an underground gasoduct to a processing plant.
There, if the gas is to be transported by sea, it is converted into liquid obtained by cooling it down to --163°C. When it arrives at the plant terminal, the liquid natural gas (LNG) is returned to its gaseous state in a re-gasification plant, before being introduced into the local gasoduct network. The LNG is stored in tanks before re-gasification. The crude oil is transported in a petroleum tanker, the capacity of which can attain 200 000 tons. It is commonly called a "super- tanker". The terminals capable of receiving such giants are few and far between. The ships used to transport the crude oil produced on an FPSO ship are of a much smaller capacity. The crude oil, before being refined, is stored in the port in the large capacity tanks.
The natural gas is preserved in reservoirs (artificial or natural). It is ready to be injected by pumping into the gasoduct network for industrial and domestic use or as fuel in power-generating stations. As far as the crude oil goes, it is transported by oleoduct to the refinery. There it undergoes a number of transformations and blending. A variety of finished products are obtained (LPG, petrol, kerosene, diesel ...), or naphtha, which will be used as the basis for the composition of plastic products by complex petroleum chemistry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips
Twitter: https://twitter.com/oilvips
And Don't forget to subscribe to our channel

Israel used to rely entirely on imported coal, natural gas and oil for its energy needs. But now the nation could be energy independent, thanks to the discovery of giant gas fields.

published:25 May 2016

views:22371

CNN's Nima Elbagir reports on Islamists taking hostages in an attack on an Algerian oil field.

published:17 Jan 2013

views:1042

Oil 101 - A FREEIntroduction to the Oil and GasIndustry
I this first of 10 modules, we introduce the learner to some key fundamentals of the Upstream segment of the oil and gas industry.
The full Oil 101 course includes:
+Introduction to Upstream
+Introduction to Midstream
+Introduction to Downstream
+Introduction to Exploration
+Introduction to Drilling
+Introduction to Production
+Introduction to Natural Gas
+Introduction to Refining
+Introduction to Supply and Trading
+Introduction to Petroleum Product Marketing
Learn More about Oil 101:
http://www.ektinteractive.com/
http://www.ektinteractive.com/oil-101/
So, What is Upstream?
Most oil and gas companies’ business structures are organized according to business segment, assets, or function.
The upstream segment of oil and gas is also known as exploration and production, or E&P because it encompasses activities related to searching for, recovering, and producing crude oil and natural gas.
Upstream is all about wells, where to locate them; how deep and how far to drill them; and how to design, construct, operate and manage them to deliver the greatest possible return on investment with the lightest, safest and smallest operational footprint.
In fact, the E&P sector should probably be called the EDP sector - because “you can’t find oil if you don’t drill wells.”
Exploration
Obtaining the Lease
Let’s start with exploration which involves the operator obtaining a lease and permission to drill from the owner of onshore or offshore acreage thought to contain oil or gas.
Then the operator must conduct geological and geophysical surveys to select the first well site to explore for, and hopefully find, economic accumulations of oil or gas.
This well is often called a “wildcat well.”
Drilling is physically creating the “borehole” in the ground that will eventually become a productive oil or gas well.
This work is typically done by rig contractors and service companies in the Oilfield Services business sector. On a wellsite, there can be as many as 30-40 different service contractors providing expertise to the operator.
Wells can be relatively simple or unbelievably complex. Wells can totally vertical for miles or both deep and horizontal.
There are also highly complex “J” and “S” configured wells with numerous branches, or laterals, emanating from the original, or “mother”, hole. These are called “deviated wells.”
Production
Finally, let’s discuss production, where reserves are “converted to cash” by maximizing the recovery of hydrocarbons from subsurface reservoirs. Essentially, production is efficiently bringing the hydrocarbons to the surface and treating them as needed to make them marketable.
So that’s the basics of E&P. We will drill deeper into each of these operations in the complete Oil 101 course at a later date. Now, let’s talk about unconventional resources, clearly the hottest topic in oil and gas over the last decade.
Unconventional Future of Oil and Gas
Unconventional resources are defined as any resource extracted, or produced, by any method other than the traditional vertical or slightly deviated well.
The three main sources of technological breakthroughs that have made unconventional developments profitable include:
Horizontal drillingHydraulic fracturing
Subsea engineering (especially deep water production)

published:04 Dec 2015

views:67184

Expedition of czech businessmen to western Siberia to learn about gas in the area. It was organised by Vemex and Gazprom. produced: radim.vaculovic@hotmail.com

published:01 May 2011

views:349

US Oil CompanyChevron is selling off its shares to a Chinese consortium by the end of this month but employees of the company have voiced violation of their rights.WION's BangladeshBureauChief Saad Hammadi brings you this report
World is One News, WION examines global issues with in-depth analysis. We provide much more than the news of the day. Our aim is to empower people to explore their world.
Subscribe to our channel at https://goo.gl/JfY3NI
Check out our website: http://www.wionews.com
Connect with us at our social media handles:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WIONews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WIONews
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+WIONews

published:25 May 2017

views:3092

The full One Hour version of 'Voices from the Gasfields' can be viewed at:
https://youtu.be/V3K0kV7UcME

Gas

Gas is one of the four fundamental states of matter (the others being solid, liquid, and plasma). A pure gas may be made up of individual atoms (e.g. a noble gas like neon), elemental molecules made from one type of atom (e.g. oxygen), or compound molecules made from a variety of atoms (e.g. carbon dioxide). A gas mixture would contain a variety of pure gases much like the air. What distinguishes a gas from liquids and solids is the vast separation of the individual gas particles. This separation usually makes a colorless gas invisible to the human observer. The interaction of gas particles in the presence of electric and gravitational fields are considered negligible as indicated by the constant velocity vectors in the image. One type of commonly known gas is steam.

The gaseous state of matter is found between the liquid and plasma states, the latter of which provides the upper temperature boundary for gases. Bounding the lower end of the temperature scale lie degenerative quantum gases which are gaining increasing attention. High-density atomic gases super cooled to incredibly low temperatures are classified by their statistical behavior as either a Bose gas or a Fermi gas. For a comprehensive listing of these exotic states of matter see list of states of matter.

Voices from the Gasfields : It started with just ONE well

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respect for the families in Australia that held onto their land and shared their stories with us. It was especially moving when BrianMonk speaks directly to the audience near the end of the video, very powerful indeed - we would be very wise to listen and act accordingly.
This film should be distributed and shown as widely as possible so we can learn and act. Full credit to Ian R Crane and his colleagues for turning around this moving, informative, high quality film in less than four months since his return from Australia.Thank you Ian and the families from Australia for the absolutely invaluable insight this film gives.
We need to take heed of the “Voices from the Gasfields” so these honourable families have not stayed loyal to their lands in vain.
Please support by donating via www.FrackingNightmare.com
FRACKING NIGHTMARE Playlist : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_m831VVDWL35u2ouMclF5ZGe7gdS7T6l
'Voices from the Gasfields' DVD orders : htttp://www.ianRcrane.com

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

3:33

Learn Oil and Gas with Animations

Learn Oil and Gas with Animations

Learn Oil and Gas with Animations

- Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips -
Oil and gas are generated from a source rock, organic matter buried in the depths of the earth. Once formed, they climb back towards the surface. On their way, cap rocks can impede their progress and they accumulate in reservoir rocks. Here they constitute hydrocarbon fields, which can be identified by interpreting seismic data (a sort of echography).
The data is obtained with the help of a seismic ship. To confirm the interpretations of seismic data, two types of drilling gear exist. Each is adapted to a range of depth of water (down to more than 2500 meters). The platform seen here is a semi-submersible, which floats and retains its stabilised position by means of anchors fixed on the seabed.
Platforms at sea are used not only for drilling but also for the production of hydrocarbons. This production consists of the separation of oil, gas and water, before the oil and gas is taken by pipeline towards a mainland terminal. Where it is impossible or too expensive to link the field to the coast by a pipeline, an FPSO ship is used (Floating Production Storage and Offloading barge). Onboard, the hydrocarbons and the water are separated. The oil is stored prior to being loaded on tankers and the gas is re-injected into the reservoir rocks. Gas from a field is taken to land through an underground gasoduct to a processing plant.
There, if the gas is to be transported by sea, it is converted into liquid obtained by cooling it down to --163°C. When it arrives at the plant terminal, the liquid natural gas (LNG) is returned to its gaseous state in a re-gasification plant, before being introduced into the local gasoduct network. The LNG is stored in tanks before re-gasification. The crude oil is transported in a petroleum tanker, the capacity of which can attain 200 000 tons. It is commonly called a "super- tanker". The terminals capable of receiving such giants are few and far between. The ships used to transport the crude oil produced on an FPSO ship are of a much smaller capacity. The crude oil, before being refined, is stored in the port in the large capacity tanks.
The natural gas is preserved in reservoirs (artificial or natural). It is ready to be injected by pumping into the gasoduct network for industrial and domestic use or as fuel in power-generating stations. As far as the crude oil goes, it is transported by oleoduct to the refinery. There it undergoes a number of transformations and blending. A variety of finished products are obtained (LPG, petrol, kerosene, diesel ...), or naphtha, which will be used as the basis for the composition of plastic products by complex petroleum chemistry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips
Twitter: https://twitter.com/oilvips
And Don't forget to subscribe to our channel

Israel may soon have more gas than it needs

Israel used to rely entirely on imported coal, natural gas and oil for its energy needs. But now the nation could be energy independent, thanks to the discovery of giant gas fields.

3:18

Hostages taken in gas field attack

Hostages taken in gas field attack

Hostages taken in gas field attack

CNN's Nima Elbagir reports on Islamists taking hostages in an attack on an Algerian oil field.

9:23

Fundamentals of Upstream Oil and Gas

Fundamentals of Upstream Oil and Gas

Fundamentals of Upstream Oil and Gas

Oil 101 - A FREEIntroduction to the Oil and GasIndustry
I this first of 10 modules, we introduce the learner to some key fundamentals of the Upstream segment of the oil and gas industry.
The full Oil 101 course includes:
+Introduction to Upstream
+Introduction to Midstream
+Introduction to Downstream
+Introduction to Exploration
+Introduction to Drilling
+Introduction to Production
+Introduction to Natural Gas
+Introduction to Refining
+Introduction to Supply and Trading
+Introduction to Petroleum Product Marketing
Learn More about Oil 101:
http://www.ektinteractive.com/
http://www.ektinteractive.com/oil-101/
So, What is Upstream?
Most oil and gas companies’ business structures are organized according to business segment, assets, or function.
The upstream segment of oil and gas is also known as exploration and production, or E&P because it encompasses activities related to searching for, recovering, and producing crude oil and natural gas.
Upstream is all about wells, where to locate them; how deep and how far to drill them; and how to design, construct, operate and manage them to deliver the greatest possible return on investment with the lightest, safest and smallest operational footprint.
In fact, the E&P sector should probably be called the EDP sector - because “you can’t find oil if you don’t drill wells.”
Exploration
Obtaining the Lease
Let’s start with exploration which involves the operator obtaining a lease and permission to drill from the owner of onshore or offshore acreage thought to contain oil or gas.
Then the operator must conduct geological and geophysical surveys to select the first well site to explore for, and hopefully find, economic accumulations of oil or gas.
This well is often called a “wildcat well.”
Drilling is physically creating the “borehole” in the ground that will eventually become a productive oil or gas well.
This work is typically done by rig contractors and service companies in the Oilfield Services business sector. On a wellsite, there can be as many as 30-40 different service contractors providing expertise to the operator.
Wells can be relatively simple or unbelievably complex. Wells can totally vertical for miles or both deep and horizontal.
There are also highly complex “J” and “S” configured wells with numerous branches, or laterals, emanating from the original, or “mother”, hole. These are called “deviated wells.”
Production
Finally, let’s discuss production, where reserves are “converted to cash” by maximizing the recovery of hydrocarbons from subsurface reservoirs. Essentially, production is efficiently bringing the hydrocarbons to the surface and treating them as needed to make them marketable.
So that’s the basics of E&P. We will drill deeper into each of these operations in the complete Oil 101 course at a later date. Now, let’s talk about unconventional resources, clearly the hottest topic in oil and gas over the last decade.
Unconventional Future of Oil and Gas
Unconventional resources are defined as any resource extracted, or produced, by any method other than the traditional vertical or slightly deviated well.
The three main sources of technological breakthroughs that have made unconventional developments profitable include:
Horizontal drillingHydraulic fracturing
Subsea engineering (especially deep water production)

7:45

Siberian Gas field Zapolyarnoe (english)

Siberian Gas field Zapolyarnoe (english)

Siberian Gas field Zapolyarnoe (english)

Expedition of czech businessmen to western Siberia to learn about gas in the area. It was organised by Vemex and Gazprom. produced: radim.vaculovic@hotmail.com

2:26

Is Chevron leaving Bangladesh's gas fields in good hands?

Is Chevron leaving Bangladesh's gas fields in good hands?

Is Chevron leaving Bangladesh's gas fields in good hands?

US Oil CompanyChevron is selling off its shares to a Chinese consortium by the end of this month but employees of the company have voiced violation of their rights.WION's BangladeshBureauChief Saad Hammadi brings you this report
World is One News, WION examines global issues with in-depth analysis. We provide much more than the news of the day. Our aim is to empower people to explore their world.
Subscribe to our channel at https://goo.gl/JfY3NI
Check out our website: http://www.wionews.com
Connect with us at our social media handles:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WIONews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WIONews
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+WIONews

26:49

Voices from the Gasfields - (Short Version)

Voices from the Gasfields - (Short Version)

Voices from the Gasfields - (Short Version)

The full One Hour version of 'Voices from the Gasfields' can be viewed at:
https://youtu.be/V3K0kV7UcME

Battle for the Gas Fields 1/6

Paul Williams Investigates (Documentary)
The Battle For The GasFields
Paul Williams tells the story of the forces and personalities
currently in conflict over the development of the Corrib Gasfield in
Mayo, speaking with all the key people involved and examining the
violent protests, arrests and bitter debate that threatens to halt
bringing the gas ashore.

3:38

The Door to Hell, Natural gas field in Turkmenistan burning since 1971

The Door to Hell, Natural gas field in Turkmenistan burning since 1971

The Door to Hell, Natural gas field in Turkmenistan burning since 1971

Voices from the Gasfields : It started with just ONE well

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respe...

published: 01 May 2015

GAS FIELD IN Bangladesh

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Is...

published: 12 May 2017

Learn Oil and Gas with Animations

- Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips -
Oil and gas are generated from a source rock, organic matter buried in the depths of the earth. Once formed, they climb back towards the surface. On their way, cap rocks can impede their progress and they accumulate in reservoir rocks. Here they constitute hydrocarbon fields, which can be identified by interpreting seismic data (a sort of echography).
The data is obtained with the help of a seismic ship. To confirm the interpretations of seismic data, two types of drilling gear exist. Each is adapted to a range of depth of water (down to more than 2500 meters). The platform seen here is a semi-submersible, which floats and retains its stabilised position by means of anchors fixed on the seabed.
Platforms at sea are used not only f...

Israel may soon have more gas than it needs

Israel used to rely entirely on imported coal, natural gas and oil for its energy needs. But now the nation could be energy independent, thanks to the discovery of giant gas fields.

published: 25 May 2016

Hostages taken in gas field attack

CNN's Nima Elbagir reports on Islamists taking hostages in an attack on an Algerian oil field.

published: 17 Jan 2013

Fundamentals of Upstream Oil and Gas

Oil 101 - A FREEIntroduction to the Oil and GasIndustry
I this first of 10 modules, we introduce the learner to some key fundamentals of the Upstream segment of the oil and gas industry.
The full Oil 101 course includes:
+Introduction to Upstream
+Introduction to Midstream
+Introduction to Downstream
+Introduction to Exploration
+Introduction to Drilling
+Introduction to Production
+Introduction to Natural Gas
+Introduction to Refining
+Introduction to Supply and Trading
+Introduction to Petroleum Product Marketing
Learn More about Oil 101:
http://www.ektinteractive.com/
http://www.ektinteractive.com/oil-101/
So, What is Upstream?
Most oil and gas companies’ business structures are organized according to business segment, assets, or function.
The upstream segment of oil and gas i...

published: 04 Dec 2015

Siberian Gas field Zapolyarnoe (english)

Expedition of czech businessmen to western Siberia to learn about gas in the area. It was organised by Vemex and Gazprom. produced: radim.vaculovic@hotmail.com

published: 01 May 2011

Is Chevron leaving Bangladesh's gas fields in good hands?

US Oil CompanyChevron is selling off its shares to a Chinese consortium by the end of this month but employees of the company have voiced violation of their rights.WION's BangladeshBureauChief Saad Hammadi brings you this report
World is One News, WION examines global issues with in-depth analysis. We provide much more than the news of the day. Our aim is to empower people to explore their world.
Subscribe to our channel at https://goo.gl/JfY3NI
Check out our website: http://www.wionews.com
Connect with us at our social media handles:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WIONews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WIONews
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+WIONews

published: 25 May 2017

Voices from the Gasfields - (Short Version)

The full One Hour version of 'Voices from the Gasfields' can be viewed at:
https://youtu.be/V3K0kV7UcME

Battle for the Gas Fields 1/6

Paul Williams Investigates (Documentary)
The Battle For The GasFields
Paul Williams tells the story of the forces and personalities
currently in conflict over the development of the Corrib Gasfield in
Mayo, speaking with all the key people involved and examining the
violent protests, arrests and bitter debate that threatens to halt
bringing the gas ashore.

published: 04 Jun 2009

The Door to Hell, Natural gas field in Turkmenistan burning since 1971

Voices from the Gasfields : It started with just ONE well

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracki...

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respect for the families in Australia that held onto their land and shared their stories with us. It was especially moving when BrianMonk speaks directly to the audience near the end of the video, very powerful indeed - we would be very wise to listen and act accordingly.
This film should be distributed and shown as widely as possible so we can learn and act. Full credit to Ian R Crane and his colleagues for turning around this moving, informative, high quality film in less than four months since his return from Australia.Thank you Ian and the families from Australia for the absolutely invaluable insight this film gives.
We need to take heed of the “Voices from the Gasfields” so these honourable families have not stayed loyal to their lands in vain.
Please support by donating via www.FrackingNightmare.com
FRACKING NIGHTMARE Playlist : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_m831VVDWL35u2ouMclF5ZGe7gdS7T6l
'Voices from the Gasfields' DVD orders : htttp://www.ianRcrane.com

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respect for the families in Australia that held onto their land and shared their stories with us. It was especially moving when BrianMonk speaks directly to the audience near the end of the video, very powerful indeed - we would be very wise to listen and act accordingly.
This film should be distributed and shown as widely as possible so we can learn and act. Full credit to Ian R Crane and his colleagues for turning around this moving, informative, high quality film in less than four months since his return from Australia.Thank you Ian and the families from Australia for the absolutely invaluable insight this film gives.
We need to take heed of the “Voices from the Gasfields” so these honourable families have not stayed loyal to their lands in vain.
Please support by donating via www.FrackingNightmare.com
FRACKING NIGHTMARE Playlist : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_m831VVDWL35u2ouMclF5ZGe7gdS7T6l
'Voices from the Gasfields' DVD orders : htttp://www.ianRcrane.com

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could ea...

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

Learn Oil and Gas with Animations

- Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips -
Oil and gas are generated from a source rock, organic matter buried in the depths of the earth. Once for...

- Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips -
Oil and gas are generated from a source rock, organic matter buried in the depths of the earth. Once formed, they climb back towards the surface. On their way, cap rocks can impede their progress and they accumulate in reservoir rocks. Here they constitute hydrocarbon fields, which can be identified by interpreting seismic data (a sort of echography).
The data is obtained with the help of a seismic ship. To confirm the interpretations of seismic data, two types of drilling gear exist. Each is adapted to a range of depth of water (down to more than 2500 meters). The platform seen here is a semi-submersible, which floats and retains its stabilised position by means of anchors fixed on the seabed.
Platforms at sea are used not only for drilling but also for the production of hydrocarbons. This production consists of the separation of oil, gas and water, before the oil and gas is taken by pipeline towards a mainland terminal. Where it is impossible or too expensive to link the field to the coast by a pipeline, an FPSO ship is used (Floating Production Storage and Offloading barge). Onboard, the hydrocarbons and the water are separated. The oil is stored prior to being loaded on tankers and the gas is re-injected into the reservoir rocks. Gas from a field is taken to land through an underground gasoduct to a processing plant.
There, if the gas is to be transported by sea, it is converted into liquid obtained by cooling it down to --163°C. When it arrives at the plant terminal, the liquid natural gas (LNG) is returned to its gaseous state in a re-gasification plant, before being introduced into the local gasoduct network. The LNG is stored in tanks before re-gasification. The crude oil is transported in a petroleum tanker, the capacity of which can attain 200 000 tons. It is commonly called a "super- tanker". The terminals capable of receiving such giants are few and far between. The ships used to transport the crude oil produced on an FPSO ship are of a much smaller capacity. The crude oil, before being refined, is stored in the port in the large capacity tanks.
The natural gas is preserved in reservoirs (artificial or natural). It is ready to be injected by pumping into the gasoduct network for industrial and domestic use or as fuel in power-generating stations. As far as the crude oil goes, it is transported by oleoduct to the refinery. There it undergoes a number of transformations and blending. A variety of finished products are obtained (LPG, petrol, kerosene, diesel ...), or naphtha, which will be used as the basis for the composition of plastic products by complex petroleum chemistry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips
Twitter: https://twitter.com/oilvips
And Don't forget to subscribe to our channel

- Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips -
Oil and gas are generated from a source rock, organic matter buried in the depths of the earth. Once formed, they climb back towards the surface. On their way, cap rocks can impede their progress and they accumulate in reservoir rocks. Here they constitute hydrocarbon fields, which can be identified by interpreting seismic data (a sort of echography).
The data is obtained with the help of a seismic ship. To confirm the interpretations of seismic data, two types of drilling gear exist. Each is adapted to a range of depth of water (down to more than 2500 meters). The platform seen here is a semi-submersible, which floats and retains its stabilised position by means of anchors fixed on the seabed.
Platforms at sea are used not only for drilling but also for the production of hydrocarbons. This production consists of the separation of oil, gas and water, before the oil and gas is taken by pipeline towards a mainland terminal. Where it is impossible or too expensive to link the field to the coast by a pipeline, an FPSO ship is used (Floating Production Storage and Offloading barge). Onboard, the hydrocarbons and the water are separated. The oil is stored prior to being loaded on tankers and the gas is re-injected into the reservoir rocks. Gas from a field is taken to land through an underground gasoduct to a processing plant.
There, if the gas is to be transported by sea, it is converted into liquid obtained by cooling it down to --163°C. When it arrives at the plant terminal, the liquid natural gas (LNG) is returned to its gaseous state in a re-gasification plant, before being introduced into the local gasoduct network. The LNG is stored in tanks before re-gasification. The crude oil is transported in a petroleum tanker, the capacity of which can attain 200 000 tons. It is commonly called a "super- tanker". The terminals capable of receiving such giants are few and far between. The ships used to transport the crude oil produced on an FPSO ship are of a much smaller capacity. The crude oil, before being refined, is stored in the port in the large capacity tanks.
The natural gas is preserved in reservoirs (artificial or natural). It is ready to be injected by pumping into the gasoduct network for industrial and domestic use or as fuel in power-generating stations. As far as the crude oil goes, it is transported by oleoduct to the refinery. There it undergoes a number of transformations and blending. A variety of finished products are obtained (LPG, petrol, kerosene, diesel ...), or naphtha, which will be used as the basis for the composition of plastic products by complex petroleum chemistry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips
Twitter: https://twitter.com/oilvips
And Don't forget to subscribe to our channel

Oil 101 - A FREEIntroduction to the Oil and GasIndustry
I this first of 10 modules, we introduce the learner to some key fundamentals of the Upstream segment of the oil and gas industry.
The full Oil 101 course includes:
+Introduction to Upstream
+Introduction to Midstream
+Introduction to Downstream
+Introduction to Exploration
+Introduction to Drilling
+Introduction to Production
+Introduction to Natural Gas
+Introduction to Refining
+Introduction to Supply and Trading
+Introduction to Petroleum Product Marketing
Learn More about Oil 101:
http://www.ektinteractive.com/
http://www.ektinteractive.com/oil-101/
So, What is Upstream?
Most oil and gas companies’ business structures are organized according to business segment, assets, or function.
The upstream segment of oil and gas is also known as exploration and production, or E&P because it encompasses activities related to searching for, recovering, and producing crude oil and natural gas.
Upstream is all about wells, where to locate them; how deep and how far to drill them; and how to design, construct, operate and manage them to deliver the greatest possible return on investment with the lightest, safest and smallest operational footprint.
In fact, the E&P sector should probably be called the EDP sector - because “you can’t find oil if you don’t drill wells.”
Exploration
Obtaining the Lease
Let’s start with exploration which involves the operator obtaining a lease and permission to drill from the owner of onshore or offshore acreage thought to contain oil or gas.
Then the operator must conduct geological and geophysical surveys to select the first well site to explore for, and hopefully find, economic accumulations of oil or gas.
This well is often called a “wildcat well.”
Drilling is physically creating the “borehole” in the ground that will eventually become a productive oil or gas well.
This work is typically done by rig contractors and service companies in the Oilfield Services business sector. On a wellsite, there can be as many as 30-40 different service contractors providing expertise to the operator.
Wells can be relatively simple or unbelievably complex. Wells can totally vertical for miles or both deep and horizontal.
There are also highly complex “J” and “S” configured wells with numerous branches, or laterals, emanating from the original, or “mother”, hole. These are called “deviated wells.”
Production
Finally, let’s discuss production, where reserves are “converted to cash” by maximizing the recovery of hydrocarbons from subsurface reservoirs. Essentially, production is efficiently bringing the hydrocarbons to the surface and treating them as needed to make them marketable.
So that’s the basics of E&P. We will drill deeper into each of these operations in the complete Oil 101 course at a later date. Now, let’s talk about unconventional resources, clearly the hottest topic in oil and gas over the last decade.
Unconventional Future of Oil and Gas
Unconventional resources are defined as any resource extracted, or produced, by any method other than the traditional vertical or slightly deviated well.
The three main sources of technological breakthroughs that have made unconventional developments profitable include:
Horizontal drillingHydraulic fracturing
Subsea engineering (especially deep water production)

Oil 101 - A FREEIntroduction to the Oil and GasIndustry
I this first of 10 modules, we introduce the learner to some key fundamentals of the Upstream segment of the oil and gas industry.
The full Oil 101 course includes:
+Introduction to Upstream
+Introduction to Midstream
+Introduction to Downstream
+Introduction to Exploration
+Introduction to Drilling
+Introduction to Production
+Introduction to Natural Gas
+Introduction to Refining
+Introduction to Supply and Trading
+Introduction to Petroleum Product Marketing
Learn More about Oil 101:
http://www.ektinteractive.com/
http://www.ektinteractive.com/oil-101/
So, What is Upstream?
Most oil and gas companies’ business structures are organized according to business segment, assets, or function.
The upstream segment of oil and gas is also known as exploration and production, or E&P because it encompasses activities related to searching for, recovering, and producing crude oil and natural gas.
Upstream is all about wells, where to locate them; how deep and how far to drill them; and how to design, construct, operate and manage them to deliver the greatest possible return on investment with the lightest, safest and smallest operational footprint.
In fact, the E&P sector should probably be called the EDP sector - because “you can’t find oil if you don’t drill wells.”
Exploration
Obtaining the Lease
Let’s start with exploration which involves the operator obtaining a lease and permission to drill from the owner of onshore or offshore acreage thought to contain oil or gas.
Then the operator must conduct geological and geophysical surveys to select the first well site to explore for, and hopefully find, economic accumulations of oil or gas.
This well is often called a “wildcat well.”
Drilling is physically creating the “borehole” in the ground that will eventually become a productive oil or gas well.
This work is typically done by rig contractors and service companies in the Oilfield Services business sector. On a wellsite, there can be as many as 30-40 different service contractors providing expertise to the operator.
Wells can be relatively simple or unbelievably complex. Wells can totally vertical for miles or both deep and horizontal.
There are also highly complex “J” and “S” configured wells with numerous branches, or laterals, emanating from the original, or “mother”, hole. These are called “deviated wells.”
Production
Finally, let’s discuss production, where reserves are “converted to cash” by maximizing the recovery of hydrocarbons from subsurface reservoirs. Essentially, production is efficiently bringing the hydrocarbons to the surface and treating them as needed to make them marketable.
So that’s the basics of E&P. We will drill deeper into each of these operations in the complete Oil 101 course at a later date. Now, let’s talk about unconventional resources, clearly the hottest topic in oil and gas over the last decade.
Unconventional Future of Oil and Gas
Unconventional resources are defined as any resource extracted, or produced, by any method other than the traditional vertical or slightly deviated well.
The three main sources of technological breakthroughs that have made unconventional developments profitable include:
Horizontal drillingHydraulic fracturing
Subsea engineering (especially deep water production)

Is Chevron leaving Bangladesh's gas fields in good hands?

US Oil CompanyChevron is selling off its shares to a Chinese consortium by the end of this month but employees of the company have voiced violation of their ri...

US Oil CompanyChevron is selling off its shares to a Chinese consortium by the end of this month but employees of the company have voiced violation of their rights.WION's BangladeshBureauChief Saad Hammadi brings you this report
World is One News, WION examines global issues with in-depth analysis. We provide much more than the news of the day. Our aim is to empower people to explore their world.
Subscribe to our channel at https://goo.gl/JfY3NI
Check out our website: http://www.wionews.com
Connect with us at our social media handles:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WIONews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WIONews
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+WIONews

US Oil CompanyChevron is selling off its shares to a Chinese consortium by the end of this month but employees of the company have voiced violation of their rights.WION's BangladeshBureauChief Saad Hammadi brings you this report
World is One News, WION examines global issues with in-depth analysis. We provide much more than the news of the day. Our aim is to empower people to explore their world.
Subscribe to our channel at https://goo.gl/JfY3NI
Check out our website: http://www.wionews.com
Connect with us at our social media handles:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WIONews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WIONews
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+WIONews

Paul Williams Investigates (Documentary)
The Battle For The GasFields
Paul Williams tells the story of the forces and personalities
currently in conflict over the development of the Corrib Gasfield in
Mayo, speaking with all the key people involved and examining the
violent protests, arrests and bitter debate that threatens to halt
bringing the gas ashore.

Paul Williams Investigates (Documentary)
The Battle For The GasFields
Paul Williams tells the story of the forces and personalities
currently in conflict over the development of the Corrib Gasfield in
Mayo, speaking with all the key people involved and examining the
violent protests, arrests and bitter debate that threatens to halt
bringing the gas ashore.

published:04 Jun 2009

views:14835

back

The Door to Hell, Natural gas field in Turkmenistan burning since 1971

GAS UP & SNOW CRUISING at the old fields.

March 10, 2018 (Persian calendar 1396/12/19)
The South Pars field is a natural-gas condensate field located in the Persian Gulf. It is by far the world's largest natural gas field, with ownership of the field shared between Iran and Qatar.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the field holds an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet (51 trillion cubic metres) of in-situ natural gas and some 50 billion barrels (7.9 billion cubic metres) of natural gas condensates.
On the list of natural gas fields it has more recoverable reserves than all other fields combined. It has significant geostrategic influence.
This gas field covers an area of 9,700 square kilometres (3,700 sq mi), of which 3,700 square kilometres (1,400 sq mi) South Pars is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,000 s...

published: 11 Mar 2018

Haripur gas field.

Haripur gas field is located in Gowainghat upazila of Sylhet district. This gas field known as SylhetGasFieldsLimited is a subsidiary organization of Petrobangla under the Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources. Production of natural and mineral gas in the country from this gas field beginsAfter independence, in 1986, the widely discussed Sylhet-7 well was excavated in Haripur, which was the only oil-producing company of the country. Over time, the power supply supply declined and after almost 560869 barrels of crude oil supplied for seven years continuously, on July 14, 1994, the supply of oil from the well stopped completely and at that time the pressure was zero. In March 2005, the well was transformed into a gas supply coupe. At that time, the well had the capacity to suppl...

PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, LIKE AND COMMENT
TIMOR NEWS
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIzZ3ivUj-JU4hjrNFMdDfQ
AUSTRALIA AND TIMOR-LESTE SIGNDEAL ON GASFIELD BOUNDARIES.THE BORDER TREATY HAS BEEN SIGNED BY TIMORESE MINISTER AGIO PEREIRA AND AUSTRALIAN FOREIGN MINISTER JULIE BISHOP MP AT THE UNITED NATIONS IN NEW YORK 06/04/2018
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKcl_uTx1SFWnQUQAjCpanA
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCk7S6u3HFjklczqBpJbeZEg

Bhola Gas Field.. A New Hope

February 17, 2018 (Persian calendar 1396/11/28)
The South Pars field is a natural-gas condensate field located in the Persian Gulf. It is by far the world's largest natural gas field, with ownership of the field shared between Iran and Qatar.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the field holds an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet (51 trillion cubic metres) of in-situ natural gas and some 50 billion barrels (7.9 billion cubic metres) of natural gas condensates.
On the list of natural gas fields it has more recoverable reserves than all other fields combined. It has significant geostrategic influence.
This gas field covers an area of 9,700 square kilometres (3,700 sq mi), of which 3,700 square kilometres (1,400 sq mi) (South Pars) is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,...

March 10, 2018 (Persian calendar 1396/12/19)
The South Pars field is a natural-gas condensate field located in the Persian Gulf. It is by far the world's largest natural gas field, with ownership of the field shared between Iran and Qatar.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the field holds an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet (51 trillion cubic metres) of in-situ natural gas and some 50 billion barrels (7.9 billion cubic metres) of natural gas condensates.
On the list of natural gas fields it has more recoverable reserves than all other fields combined. It has significant geostrategic influence.
This gas field covers an area of 9,700 square kilometres (3,700 sq mi), of which 3,700 square kilometres (1,400 sq mi) South Pars is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,000 square kilometres (2,300 sq mi) is in Qatari territorial waters.
Iran made South Pars GasCondensate & Gas Refinery report
گزارشي از پالايشگاه گاز پارس جنوبي ايران

March 10, 2018 (Persian calendar 1396/12/19)
The South Pars field is a natural-gas condensate field located in the Persian Gulf. It is by far the world's largest natural gas field, with ownership of the field shared between Iran and Qatar.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the field holds an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet (51 trillion cubic metres) of in-situ natural gas and some 50 billion barrels (7.9 billion cubic metres) of natural gas condensates.
On the list of natural gas fields it has more recoverable reserves than all other fields combined. It has significant geostrategic influence.
This gas field covers an area of 9,700 square kilometres (3,700 sq mi), of which 3,700 square kilometres (1,400 sq mi) South Pars is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,000 square kilometres (2,300 sq mi) is in Qatari territorial waters.
Iran made South Pars GasCondensate & Gas Refinery report
گزارشي از پالايشگاه گاز پارس جنوبي ايران

Haripur gas field is located in Gowainghat upazila of Sylhet district. This gas field known as SylhetGasFieldsLimited is a subsidiary organization of Petrobangla under the Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources. Production of natural and mineral gas in the country from this gas field beginsAfter independence, in 1986, the widely discussed Sylhet-7 well was excavated in Haripur, which was the only oil-producing company of the country. Over time, the power supply supply declined and after almost 560869 barrels of crude oil supplied for seven years continuously, on July 14, 1994, the supply of oil from the well stopped completely and at that time the pressure was zero. In March 2005, the well was transformed into a gas supply coupe. At that time, the well had the capacity to supply 15 mmcfd gas.
The last dug in the Haripur gas field in 1989 was the surma 1a, which was excavated by the Simmeter Exploration Limited. Oil was found in search of oil but the oil was not found in the well. Currently the gas is being produced from this well. Recently, the work of three-dimensional seismic survey in this gas field is over.
For gas and other resource processing from the well, this X-ray gas sculpture, 1 x30mm SCFD silicotype solid decay reduction plant and 68 bbl / day capacity condensate fertility plant has been installed.

Haripur gas field is located in Gowainghat upazila of Sylhet district. This gas field known as SylhetGasFieldsLimited is a subsidiary organization of Petrobangla under the Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources. Production of natural and mineral gas in the country from this gas field beginsAfter independence, in 1986, the widely discussed Sylhet-7 well was excavated in Haripur, which was the only oil-producing company of the country. Over time, the power supply supply declined and after almost 560869 barrels of crude oil supplied for seven years continuously, on July 14, 1994, the supply of oil from the well stopped completely and at that time the pressure was zero. In March 2005, the well was transformed into a gas supply coupe. At that time, the well had the capacity to supply 15 mmcfd gas.
The last dug in the Haripur gas field in 1989 was the surma 1a, which was excavated by the Simmeter Exploration Limited. Oil was found in search of oil but the oil was not found in the well. Currently the gas is being produced from this well. Recently, the work of three-dimensional seismic survey in this gas field is over.
For gas and other resource processing from the well, this X-ray gas sculpture, 1 x30mm SCFD silicotype solid decay reduction plant and 68 bbl / day capacity condensate fertility plant has been installed.

PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, LIKE AND COMMENT
TIMOR NEWS
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIzZ3ivUj-JU4hjrNFMdDfQ
AUSTRALIA AND TIMOR-LESTE SIGNDEAL ON GASFIELD BOUNDARIES.THE BORDER TREATY HAS BEEN SIGNED BY TIMORESE MINISTER AGIO PEREIRA AND AUSTRALIAN FOREIGN MINISTER JULIE BISHOP MP AT THE UNITED NATIONS IN NEW YORK 06/04/2018
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKcl_uTx1SFWnQUQAjCpanA
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCk7S6u3HFjklczqBpJbeZEg

PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, LIKE AND COMMENT
TIMOR NEWS
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIzZ3ivUj-JU4hjrNFMdDfQ
AUSTRALIA AND TIMOR-LESTE SIGNDEAL ON GASFIELD BOUNDARIES.THE BORDER TREATY HAS BEEN SIGNED BY TIMORESE MINISTER AGIO PEREIRA AND AUSTRALIAN FOREIGN MINISTER JULIE BISHOP MP AT THE UNITED NATIONS IN NEW YORK 06/04/2018
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKcl_uTx1SFWnQUQAjCpanA
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCk7S6u3HFjklczqBpJbeZEg

February 17, 2018 (Persian calendar 1396/11/28)
The South Pars field is a natural-gas condensate field located in the Persian Gulf. It is by far the world's largest natural gas field, with ownership of the field shared between Iran and Qatar.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the field holds an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet (51 trillion cubic metres) of in-situ natural gas and some 50 billion barrels (7.9 billion cubic metres) of natural gas condensates.
On the list of natural gas fields it has more recoverable reserves than all other fields combined. It has significant geostrategic influence.
This gas field covers an area of 9,700 square kilometres (3,700 sq mi), of which 3,700 square kilometres (1,400 sq mi) (South Pars) is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,000 square kilometres (2,300 sq mi) is in Qatari territorial waters.
Iran made Natural GasOffshoreRefinery, South Pars GasCondensateSPD 13
پالايشگاه گاز فراساحل خليج فارس ايران

February 17, 2018 (Persian calendar 1396/11/28)
The South Pars field is a natural-gas condensate field located in the Persian Gulf. It is by far the world's largest natural gas field, with ownership of the field shared between Iran and Qatar.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the field holds an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet (51 trillion cubic metres) of in-situ natural gas and some 50 billion barrels (7.9 billion cubic metres) of natural gas condensates.
On the list of natural gas fields it has more recoverable reserves than all other fields combined. It has significant geostrategic influence.
This gas field covers an area of 9,700 square kilometres (3,700 sq mi), of which 3,700 square kilometres (1,400 sq mi) (South Pars) is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,000 square kilometres (2,300 sq mi) is in Qatari territorial waters.
Iran made Natural GasOffshoreRefinery, South Pars GasCondensateSPD 13
پالايشگاه گاز فراساحل خليج فارس ايران

Voices from the Gasfields : It started with just ONE well

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respe...

published: 01 May 2015

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Is...

published: 12 May 2017

Voices from the Gasfields - (Short Version)

The full One Hour version of 'Voices from the Gasfields' can be viewed at:
https://youtu.be/V3K0kV7UcME

Shale cowboys: fracking under Trump - (VPRO documentary - 2017)

Having your own energy sources is an important weapon in the world economy. Since 2013, the United States has made important foes of fossil-rich opponents like Saudi Arabia important in extracting shale gas and shale oil from its own soil. The price for a barrel of crude oil fell from 100 to less than $50. The Texan shale producers who survived this price tag are the new heroes of the United States. Under president Donald Trump, the shale cowboys are striving to help Europe to become independent. On research in Trumpland.
Original title: Schaliecowboys
Schale stone was considered worthless by the oil and gas industry in the past. They passed through on their way to expensive oil and gas that lay deeper. Until a small Texan gas company found a way in the late 1990's to win gas from hard-sh...

published: 25 Jun 2017

Along The Pipeline

A documentary about Telecom Australia's (now Telstra) communications for the natural gas pipeline from Moomba SA to Sydney NSW. It would have been made some time in the late 1970s.

published: 30 Dec 2016

Focus on Africa: 🇲🇿 Mozambique's debt and protest in South Africa | Counting the Cost

The discovery of gas fields off the Mozambique coast in 2011 was meant to transform the economy, but five years later, it's an economy in trouble.
This past week, the Ministry of Finance said Mozambique's debt is now more than double its gross domestic product, and talks with creditors must take place in order to restructure the debt mountain.
So what went wrong? And how has a country, which has seen massive improvements in its economy since the end of its civil war back in 1992, now landed with potentially uncontrollable debts?
Student protests in South Africa
South Africa has been suffering months of low growth, political turmoil and violent student protests, and this week, Finance MinisterPravin Gordhan cut the country's growth forecast down to just 0.5 percent.
Nearly one million...

Mobile can accelerate productivity and responsiveness and have a positive impact on your employee and customer experiences. In this VirtualRoundtable for the Oil & Gas and Energy & Utility Industries the speakers delve into trends impacting on mobile adoption across these industries. Increasing asset performance and reliability by automating maintenance and repair processes, spot and prevent failures and incidents with mobile inspection procedures, be deployable across both onshore and offshore locations and seamlessly integrated into the operator's existing access control system whilst synchronizing to handheld devices.

published: 04 Jun 2014

Counting the Cost - Greece's hidden riches

Hundreds of billions of dollars worth of oil and gas are believed trapped under the seabed around Greece - enough to wipe out the country's debt for good. But can they get to it? And who else is looking to get their hands on the energy bonanza? Some experts say the recent discoveries of oil and gas in the Aegean Sea could turn the entire region into the 'New Gulf'. But where there is oil, there is usually some sort of conflict.

Voices from the Gasfields : It started with just ONE well

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracki...

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respect for the families in Australia that held onto their land and shared their stories with us. It was especially moving when BrianMonk speaks directly to the audience near the end of the video, very powerful indeed - we would be very wise to listen and act accordingly.
This film should be distributed and shown as widely as possible so we can learn and act. Full credit to Ian R Crane and his colleagues for turning around this moving, informative, high quality film in less than four months since his return from Australia.Thank you Ian and the families from Australia for the absolutely invaluable insight this film gives.
We need to take heed of the “Voices from the Gasfields” so these honourable families have not stayed loyal to their lands in vain.
Please support by donating via www.FrackingNightmare.com
FRACKING NIGHTMARE Playlist : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_m831VVDWL35u2ouMclF5ZGe7gdS7T6l
'Voices from the Gasfields' DVD orders : htttp://www.ianRcrane.com

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respect for the families in Australia that held onto their land and shared their stories with us. It was especially moving when BrianMonk speaks directly to the audience near the end of the video, very powerful indeed - we would be very wise to listen and act accordingly.
This film should be distributed and shown as widely as possible so we can learn and act. Full credit to Ian R Crane and his colleagues for turning around this moving, informative, high quality film in less than four months since his return from Australia.Thank you Ian and the families from Australia for the absolutely invaluable insight this film gives.
We need to take heed of the “Voices from the Gasfields” so these honourable families have not stayed loyal to their lands in vain.
Please support by donating via www.FrackingNightmare.com
FRACKING NIGHTMARE Playlist : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_m831VVDWL35u2ouMclF5ZGe7gdS7T6l
'Voices from the Gasfields' DVD orders : htttp://www.ianRcrane.com

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could ea...

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

Focus on Africa: 🇲🇿 Mozambique's debt and protest in South Africa | Counting the Cost

The discovery of gas fields off the Mozambique coast in 2011 was meant to transform the economy, but five years later, it's an economy in trouble.
This past we...

The discovery of gas fields off the Mozambique coast in 2011 was meant to transform the economy, but five years later, it's an economy in trouble.
This past week, the Ministry of Finance said Mozambique's debt is now more than double its gross domestic product, and talks with creditors must take place in order to restructure the debt mountain.
So what went wrong? And how has a country, which has seen massive improvements in its economy since the end of its civil war back in 1992, now landed with potentially uncontrollable debts?
Student protests in South Africa
South Africa has been suffering months of low growth, political turmoil and violent student protests, and this week, Finance MinisterPravin Gordhan cut the country's growth forecast down to just 0.5 percent.
Nearly one million students enrolled in state-run education institutions last year - the government says that is too many and that the facilities can only cope with around 600,000. Resources are already stretched to capacity and not everybody can get government support.
There has been an increase in subsidies for South Africa's poorest students, but that has not made any dents in the needs of the majority.
EU-Canada trade deal
A free trade pact between the European Union and Canada - known as CETA - has been agreed but not without a fight. The tiny Belgian state of Wallonia nearly tripped up the transatlantic deal with concerns for the agriculture industry and the environment.
Siegfried Muresan, an MEP and spokesperson for the European People's Party, credits the deal with the ability to "lift people out of poverty" and create growth, saying: "The deal is good for Canada, good for the EU and is the most modern trade deal which the EU has ever negotiated."
"Trade is, of course, a key growth engine in Europe," continues Muresan. "We are exporting a lot, which means more trade and more jobs are being secured here."
More from Counting the Cost on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/countingthecostYT
Website - http://aljazeera.com/countingthecost/

The discovery of gas fields off the Mozambique coast in 2011 was meant to transform the economy, but five years later, it's an economy in trouble.
This past week, the Ministry of Finance said Mozambique's debt is now more than double its gross domestic product, and talks with creditors must take place in order to restructure the debt mountain.
So what went wrong? And how has a country, which has seen massive improvements in its economy since the end of its civil war back in 1992, now landed with potentially uncontrollable debts?
Student protests in South Africa
South Africa has been suffering months of low growth, political turmoil and violent student protests, and this week, Finance MinisterPravin Gordhan cut the country's growth forecast down to just 0.5 percent.
Nearly one million students enrolled in state-run education institutions last year - the government says that is too many and that the facilities can only cope with around 600,000. Resources are already stretched to capacity and not everybody can get government support.
There has been an increase in subsidies for South Africa's poorest students, but that has not made any dents in the needs of the majority.
EU-Canada trade deal
A free trade pact between the European Union and Canada - known as CETA - has been agreed but not without a fight. The tiny Belgian state of Wallonia nearly tripped up the transatlantic deal with concerns for the agriculture industry and the environment.
Siegfried Muresan, an MEP and spokesperson for the European People's Party, credits the deal with the ability to "lift people out of poverty" and create growth, saying: "The deal is good for Canada, good for the EU and is the most modern trade deal which the EU has ever negotiated."
"Trade is, of course, a key growth engine in Europe," continues Muresan. "We are exporting a lot, which means more trade and more jobs are being secured here."
More from Counting the Cost on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/countingthecostYT
Website - http://aljazeera.com/countingthecost/

Mobile can accelerate productivity and responsiveness and have a positive impact on your employee and customer experiences. In this VirtualRoundtable for the O...

Mobile can accelerate productivity and responsiveness and have a positive impact on your employee and customer experiences. In this VirtualRoundtable for the Oil & Gas and Energy & Utility Industries the speakers delve into trends impacting on mobile adoption across these industries. Increasing asset performance and reliability by automating maintenance and repair processes, spot and prevent failures and incidents with mobile inspection procedures, be deployable across both onshore and offshore locations and seamlessly integrated into the operator's existing access control system whilst synchronizing to handheld devices.

Mobile can accelerate productivity and responsiveness and have a positive impact on your employee and customer experiences. In this VirtualRoundtable for the Oil & Gas and Energy & Utility Industries the speakers delve into trends impacting on mobile adoption across these industries. Increasing asset performance and reliability by automating maintenance and repair processes, spot and prevent failures and incidents with mobile inspection procedures, be deployable across both onshore and offshore locations and seamlessly integrated into the operator's existing access control system whilst synchronizing to handheld devices.

Counting the Cost - Greece's hidden riches

Hundreds of billions of dollars worth of oil and gas are believed trapped under the seabed around Greece - enough to wipe out the country's debt for good. But ...

Hundreds of billions of dollars worth of oil and gas are believed trapped under the seabed around Greece - enough to wipe out the country's debt for good. But can they get to it? And who else is looking to get their hands on the energy bonanza? Some experts say the recent discoveries of oil and gas in the Aegean Sea could turn the entire region into the 'New Gulf'. But where there is oil, there is usually some sort of conflict.

Hundreds of billions of dollars worth of oil and gas are believed trapped under the seabed around Greece - enough to wipe out the country's debt for good. But can they get to it? And who else is looking to get their hands on the energy bonanza? Some experts say the recent discoveries of oil and gas in the Aegean Sea could turn the entire region into the 'New Gulf'. But where there is oil, there is usually some sort of conflict.

Voices from the Gasfields : It started with just ONE well

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respect for the families in Australia that held onto their land and shared their stories with us. It was especially moving when BrianMonk speaks directly to the audience near the end of the video, very powerful indeed - we would be very wise to listen and act accordingly.
This film should be distributed and shown as widely as possible so we can learn and act. Full credit to Ian R Crane and his colleagues for turning around this moving, informative, high quality film in less than four months since his return from Australia.Thank you Ian and the families from Australia for the absolutely invaluable insight this film gives.
We need to take heed of the “Voices from the Gasfields” so these honourable families have not stayed loyal to their lands in vain.
Please support by donating via www.FrackingNightmare.com
FRACKING NIGHTMARE Playlist : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_m831VVDWL35u2ouMclF5ZGe7gdS7T6l
'Voices from the Gasfields' DVD orders : htttp://www.ianRcrane.com

3:10

GAS FIELD IN Bangladesh

Its very Dangerous gas field in Sylhet, Bangladesh.
Danger GAS FIELD IN Bangladesh

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

3:33

Learn Oil and Gas with Animations

- Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips -
Oil and gas are generated from a s...

Learn Oil and Gas with Animations

- Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips -
Oil and gas are generated from a source rock, organic matter buried in the depths of the earth. Once formed, they climb back towards the surface. On their way, cap rocks can impede their progress and they accumulate in reservoir rocks. Here they constitute hydrocarbon fields, which can be identified by interpreting seismic data (a sort of echography).
The data is obtained with the help of a seismic ship. To confirm the interpretations of seismic data, two types of drilling gear exist. Each is adapted to a range of depth of water (down to more than 2500 meters). The platform seen here is a semi-submersible, which floats and retains its stabilised position by means of anchors fixed on the seabed.
Platforms at sea are used not only for drilling but also for the production of hydrocarbons. This production consists of the separation of oil, gas and water, before the oil and gas is taken by pipeline towards a mainland terminal. Where it is impossible or too expensive to link the field to the coast by a pipeline, an FPSO ship is used (Floating Production Storage and Offloading barge). Onboard, the hydrocarbons and the water are separated. The oil is stored prior to being loaded on tankers and the gas is re-injected into the reservoir rocks. Gas from a field is taken to land through an underground gasoduct to a processing plant.
There, if the gas is to be transported by sea, it is converted into liquid obtained by cooling it down to --163°C. When it arrives at the plant terminal, the liquid natural gas (LNG) is returned to its gaseous state in a re-gasification plant, before being introduced into the local gasoduct network. The LNG is stored in tanks before re-gasification. The crude oil is transported in a petroleum tanker, the capacity of which can attain 200 000 tons. It is commonly called a "super- tanker". The terminals capable of receiving such giants are few and far between. The ships used to transport the crude oil produced on an FPSO ship are of a much smaller capacity. The crude oil, before being refined, is stored in the port in the large capacity tanks.
The natural gas is preserved in reservoirs (artificial or natural). It is ready to be injected by pumping into the gasoduct network for industrial and domestic use or as fuel in power-generating stations. As far as the crude oil goes, it is transported by oleoduct to the refinery. There it undergoes a number of transformations and blending. A variety of finished products are obtained (LPG, petrol, kerosene, diesel ...), or naphtha, which will be used as the basis for the composition of plastic products by complex petroleum chemistry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like our Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oilvips
Twitter: https://twitter.com/oilvips
And Don't forget to subscribe to our channel

Fundamentals of Upstream Oil and Gas

Oil 101 - A FREEIntroduction to the Oil and GasIndustry
I this first of 10 modules, we introduce the learner to some key fundamentals of the Upstream segment of the oil and gas industry.
The full Oil 101 course includes:
+Introduction to Upstream
+Introduction to Midstream
+Introduction to Downstream
+Introduction to Exploration
+Introduction to Drilling
+Introduction to Production
+Introduction to Natural Gas
+Introduction to Refining
+Introduction to Supply and Trading
+Introduction to Petroleum Product Marketing
Learn More about Oil 101:
http://www.ektinteractive.com/
http://www.ektinteractive.com/oil-101/
So, What is Upstream?
Most oil and gas companies’ business structures are organized according to business segment, assets, or function.
The upstream segment of oil and gas is also known as exploration and production, or E&P because it encompasses activities related to searching for, recovering, and producing crude oil and natural gas.
Upstream is all about wells, where to locate them; how deep and how far to drill them; and how to design, construct, operate and manage them to deliver the greatest possible return on investment with the lightest, safest and smallest operational footprint.
In fact, the E&P sector should probably be called the EDP sector - because “you can’t find oil if you don’t drill wells.”
Exploration
Obtaining the Lease
Let’s start with exploration which involves the operator obtaining a lease and permission to drill from the owner of onshore or offshore acreage thought to contain oil or gas.
Then the operator must conduct geological and geophysical surveys to select the first well site to explore for, and hopefully find, economic accumulations of oil or gas.
This well is often called a “wildcat well.”
Drilling is physically creating the “borehole” in the ground that will eventually become a productive oil or gas well.
This work is typically done by rig contractors and service companies in the Oilfield Services business sector. On a wellsite, there can be as many as 30-40 different service contractors providing expertise to the operator.
Wells can be relatively simple or unbelievably complex. Wells can totally vertical for miles or both deep and horizontal.
There are also highly complex “J” and “S” configured wells with numerous branches, or laterals, emanating from the original, or “mother”, hole. These are called “deviated wells.”
Production
Finally, let’s discuss production, where reserves are “converted to cash” by maximizing the recovery of hydrocarbons from subsurface reservoirs. Essentially, production is efficiently bringing the hydrocarbons to the surface and treating them as needed to make them marketable.
So that’s the basics of E&P. We will drill deeper into each of these operations in the complete Oil 101 course at a later date. Now, let’s talk about unconventional resources, clearly the hottest topic in oil and gas over the last decade.
Unconventional Future of Oil and Gas
Unconventional resources are defined as any resource extracted, or produced, by any method other than the traditional vertical or slightly deviated well.
The three main sources of technological breakthroughs that have made unconventional developments profitable include:
Horizontal drillingHydraulic fracturing
Subsea engineering (especially deep water production)

7:45

Siberian Gas field Zapolyarnoe (english)

Expedition of czech businessmen to western Siberia to learn about gas in the area. It was ...

Is Chevron leaving Bangladesh's gas fields in good hands?

US Oil CompanyChevron is selling off its shares to a Chinese consortium by the end of this month but employees of the company have voiced violation of their rights.WION's BangladeshBureauChief Saad Hammadi brings you this report
World is One News, WION examines global issues with in-depth analysis. We provide much more than the news of the day. Our aim is to empower people to explore their world.
Subscribe to our channel at https://goo.gl/JfY3NI
Check out our website: http://www.wionews.com
Connect with us at our social media handles:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WIONews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WIONews
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+WIONews

26:49

Voices from the Gasfields - (Short Version)

The full One Hour version of 'Voices from the Gasfields' can be viewed at:
https://youtu.b...

Battle for the Gas Fields 1/6

Paul Williams Investigates (Documentary)
The Battle For The GasFields
Paul Williams tells the story of the forces and personalities
currently in conflict over the development of the Corrib Gasfield in
Mayo, speaking with all the key people involved and examining the
violent protests, arrests and bitter debate that threatens to halt
bringing the gas ashore.

3:38

The Door to Hell, Natural gas field in Turkmenistan burning since 1971

The Door to Hell, Natural gas field in Turkmenistan burning since 1971

March 10, 2018 (Persian calendar 1396/12/19)
The South Pars field is a natural-gas condensate field located in the Persian Gulf. It is by far the world's largest natural gas field, with ownership of the field shared between Iran and Qatar.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the field holds an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet (51 trillion cubic metres) of in-situ natural gas and some 50 billion barrels (7.9 billion cubic metres) of natural gas condensates.
On the list of natural gas fields it has more recoverable reserves than all other fields combined. It has significant geostrategic influence.
This gas field covers an area of 9,700 square kilometres (3,700 sq mi), of which 3,700 square kilometres (1,400 sq mi) South Pars is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,000 square kilometres (2,300 sq mi) is in Qatari territorial waters.
Iran made South Pars GasCondensate & Gas Refinery report
گزارشي از پالايشگاه گاز پارس جنوبي ايران

0:46

Haripur gas field.

Haripur gas field is located in Gowainghat upazila of Sylhet district. This gas field know...

Haripur gas field.

Haripur gas field is located in Gowainghat upazila of Sylhet district. This gas field known as SylhetGasFieldsLimited is a subsidiary organization of Petrobangla under the Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources. Production of natural and mineral gas in the country from this gas field beginsAfter independence, in 1986, the widely discussed Sylhet-7 well was excavated in Haripur, which was the only oil-producing company of the country. Over time, the power supply supply declined and after almost 560869 barrels of crude oil supplied for seven years continuously, on July 14, 1994, the supply of oil from the well stopped completely and at that time the pressure was zero. In March 2005, the well was transformed into a gas supply coupe. At that time, the well had the capacity to supply 15 mmcfd gas.
The last dug in the Haripur gas field in 1989 was the surma 1a, which was excavated by the Simmeter Exploration Limited. Oil was found in search of oil but the oil was not found in the well. Currently the gas is being produced from this well. Recently, the work of three-dimensional seismic survey in this gas field is over.
For gas and other resource processing from the well, this X-ray gas sculpture, 1 x30mm SCFD silicotype solid decay reduction plant and 68 bbl / day capacity condensate fertility plant has been installed.

PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, LIKE AND COMMENT
TIMOR NEWS
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIzZ3ivUj-JU4hjrNFMdDfQ
AUSTRALIA AND TIMOR-LESTE SIGNDEAL ON GASFIELD BOUNDARIES.THE BORDER TREATY HAS BEEN SIGNED BY TIMORESE MINISTER AGIO PEREIRA AND AUSTRALIAN FOREIGN MINISTER JULIE BISHOP MP AT THE UNITED NATIONS IN NEW YORK 06/04/2018
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKcl_uTx1SFWnQUQAjCpanA
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCk7S6u3HFjklczqBpJbeZEg

February 17, 2018 (Persian calendar 1396/11/28)
The South Pars field is a natural-gas condensate field located in the Persian Gulf. It is by far the world's largest natural gas field, with ownership of the field shared between Iran and Qatar.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the field holds an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet (51 trillion cubic metres) of in-situ natural gas and some 50 billion barrels (7.9 billion cubic metres) of natural gas condensates.
On the list of natural gas fields it has more recoverable reserves than all other fields combined. It has significant geostrategic influence.
This gas field covers an area of 9,700 square kilometres (3,700 sq mi), of which 3,700 square kilometres (1,400 sq mi) (South Pars) is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,000 square kilometres (2,300 sq mi) is in Qatari territorial waters.
Iran made Natural GasOffshoreRefinery, South Pars GasCondensateSPD 13
پالايشگاه گاز فراساحل خليج فارس ايران

Voices from the Gasfields : It started with just ONE well

This is the film the UK & Australian Governments do NOT want you to see! Documenting the accounts of families living with the Unconventional hydrocarbon (Fracking) industry as a neighbour, this hour long documentary is shocking, as it reveals the day to day pollution these people live with – pollution of water, air, light and sound, some of the the basic human requirements needed to survive. The blind eye that the authorities and the Unconventional hydrocarbon (fracking) industry turn to these families living conditions, and the complete disregard to the environmental damage done to the bush by this, is truly disgraceful.
I have not seen another film like it, telling us, warning us how really dreadful life is living amongst the fracked gas wells of SouthernQueensland. I have a huge respect for the families in Australia that held onto their land and shared their stories with us. It was especially moving when BrianMonk speaks directly to the audience near the end of the video, very powerful indeed - we would be very wise to listen and act accordingly.
This film should be distributed and shown as widely as possible so we can learn and act. Full credit to Ian R Crane and his colleagues for turning around this moving, informative, high quality film in less than four months since his return from Australia.Thank you Ian and the families from Australia for the absolutely invaluable insight this film gives.
We need to take heed of the “Voices from the Gasfields” so these honourable families have not stayed loyal to their lands in vain.
Please support by donating via www.FrackingNightmare.com
FRACKING NIGHTMARE Playlist : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_m831VVDWL35u2ouMclF5ZGe7gdS7T6l
'Voices from the Gasfields' DVD orders : htttp://www.ianRcrane.com

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

26:49

Voices from the Gasfields - (Short Version)

The full One Hour version of 'Voices from the Gasfields' can be viewed at:
https://youtu.b...

Focus on Africa: 🇲🇿 Mozambique's debt and protest in South Africa | Counting the Cost

The discovery of gas fields off the Mozambique coast in 2011 was meant to transform the economy, but five years later, it's an economy in trouble.
This past week, the Ministry of Finance said Mozambique's debt is now more than double its gross domestic product, and talks with creditors must take place in order to restructure the debt mountain.
So what went wrong? And how has a country, which has seen massive improvements in its economy since the end of its civil war back in 1992, now landed with potentially uncontrollable debts?
Student protests in South Africa
South Africa has been suffering months of low growth, political turmoil and violent student protests, and this week, Finance MinisterPravin Gordhan cut the country's growth forecast down to just 0.5 percent.
Nearly one million students enrolled in state-run education institutions last year - the government says that is too many and that the facilities can only cope with around 600,000. Resources are already stretched to capacity and not everybody can get government support.
There has been an increase in subsidies for South Africa's poorest students, but that has not made any dents in the needs of the majority.
EU-Canada trade deal
A free trade pact between the European Union and Canada - known as CETA - has been agreed but not without a fight. The tiny Belgian state of Wallonia nearly tripped up the transatlantic deal with concerns for the agriculture industry and the environment.
Siegfried Muresan, an MEP and spokesperson for the European People's Party, credits the deal with the ability to "lift people out of poverty" and create growth, saying: "The deal is good for Canada, good for the EU and is the most modern trade deal which the EU has ever negotiated."
"Trade is, of course, a key growth engine in Europe," continues Muresan. "We are exporting a lot, which means more trade and more jobs are being secured here."
More from Counting the Cost on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/countingthecostYT
Website - http://aljazeera.com/countingthecost/

Mobile can accelerate productivity and responsiveness and have a positive impact on your employee and customer experiences. In this VirtualRoundtable for the Oil & Gas and Energy & Utility Industries the speakers delve into trends impacting on mobile adoption across these industries. Increasing asset performance and reliability by automating maintenance and repair processes, spot and prevent failures and incidents with mobile inspection procedures, be deployable across both onshore and offshore locations and seamlessly integrated into the operator's existing access control system whilst synchronizing to handheld devices.

25:01

Counting the Cost - Greece's hidden riches

Hundreds of billions of dollars worth of oil and gas are believed trapped under the seabed...

Counting the Cost - Greece's hidden riches

Hundreds of billions of dollars worth of oil and gas are believed trapped under the seabed around Greece - enough to wipe out the country's debt for good. But can they get to it? And who else is looking to get their hands on the energy bonanza? Some experts say the recent discoveries of oil and gas in the Aegean Sea could turn the entire region into the 'New Gulf'. But where there is oil, there is usually some sort of conflict.

Voices from the Gasfields : It started with just O...

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-chang...

Voices from the Gasfields - (Short Version)...

Will Sri Lanka possess several petroleum and gas f...

TRUCKING THROUGH GAS FIELDS OF NORTH DAKOTA, USA...

LIVE from Hayyan Gas Fields in West Palmyra...

Early Oil and Gas Production in California...

Pipe Down SD...

Israel and Cyprus : the coming Energy SUPERPOWER" ...

Shale cowboys: fracking under Trump - (VPRO docume...

Along The Pipeline...

Focus on Africa: 🇲🇿 Mozambique's debt and protest...

Mobility challenges faced in the Oil & Gas and Ene...

Counting the Cost - Greece's hidden riches...

It turns out that a theory explaining how we might detect parallel universes and prediction for the end of the world was proposed and completed by physicist Stephen Hawking shortly before he died ... &nbsp;. According to reports, the work predicts that the universe would eventually end when stars run out of energy ... ....

Article by WN.Com Correspondent Dallas DarlingIt wasn’t very long ago Republicans were accusing Democrats of either paying a few dollars to the homeless for votes or giving them a pack of cigarettes. But with Donald Trump, it’s obvious he paid $130,000 to an adult-film star in exchange for her silence last October and just before the general election ... Was the payment from his own account – or from a lawyer – or from campaign donations....

Britain must prove Russia’s involvement in the poisoning of the former double agent Sergei Skripal in the UK or apologise, the Kremlin has said. “Sooner or later these unsubstantiated allegations will have to be answered for. either backed up with the appropriate evidence or apologised for,” the presidential spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said on Monday ... Sergei Skripal. Russia expels 23 UK diplomats as row deepens. Read more ... ....

Residents of Gorthanai have stopped the officials of Sui NorthernGasPipelineLimited (SNGPL) from laying pipelines in their village till addressing their reservations ... They said that the SNGPL was laying the gas pipeline in the agricultural fields, adding that their reservation should be addressed first....

The average price of regular gas in Chattanooga on Sunday was $2.23 per gallon, according to GasBuddy's daily survey of 170 gas outlets in Chattanooga released today. Local gas prices remained 31 cents per gallon below the U.S ... Local gas prices are ......

CNX Resources Corp. completed a deal to sell a gas-gathering system in West Virginia to to its midstream MLP. CNX MidstreamPartners LP (NYSE...The system gathers about 180 million cubic feet of Marcellus Shale wet gas in four counties in West Virginia. The deal between CNX (NYSE. CNX) and CNX Midstream will involve an amended gas gathering agreement and a minimum production commitment,… ... ....

Cloumbia Gas of PennsylvaniaInc. has filed a request with the state Public Utility Commission to adjust its rates ... (NYSE. NI), will continue to upgrade and replace natural gas distribution pipelines, according to a news release. The average total bill for a residential customer could increase between 3 percent and 31 percent, depending on how much gas each customer purchases, the release said ... ....

Hundreds of homes have been evacuated overnight after a car crashed into an energy plant and caused a 'pungent' gas leak ... 'The emergency services remain on scene following a gas leak in Whitestone Way in Croydon....